Lead Exposure Claims

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Lead paint was commonly used in New York City residential buildings built before 1978. In many of these buildings, it remains beneath newer paint layers on window frames, doors, and deteriorating surfaces throughout the apartment. When paint chips, peels, or is disturbed during renovation, lead dust spreads invisibly through living spaces. Children ingest it through normal hand-to-mouth contact, and the damage accumulates silently, often long before anyone links a child’s symptoms to their home.

Subin Law represents families affected by lead paint exposure in New York City. These cases focus on whether landlords met their documented obligations to identify and correct lead hazards, and whether failures to do so contributed to a child’s harm.

The Harm Lead Exposure Causes

Lead poisoning in children causes some of the most serious and permanent harm in personal injury litigation. Symptoms often develop gradually and overlap with those of other conditions, so exposure is frequently undetected until a blood test confirms elevated lead levels.

When symptoms appear, they may include developmental delays, learning disabilities, behavioral problems, irritability, fatigue, and, in serious cases, permanent neurological damage that affects a child’s ability to learn, communicate, and function independently throughout life. The harm is not limited to childhood. Early lead exposure can shape educational outcomes, employment capacity, and quality of life for decades.

Landlord Obligations

New York City imposes significant lead paint obligations on residential landlords, particularly in older buildings where young children reside. These obligations include inspecting for lead paint hazards, responding to tenant complaints about deteriorating paint, and keeping records of inspections and repairs. Where regulatory agencies identify hazards, landlords are required to address them.

Where a landlord received prior notice of a lead paint hazard through a tenant complaint, a regulatory order, or a prior violation and failed to correct it, that failure and its documentation become central to the claim.

Building the Case

Lead exposure claims require linking the hazardous condition in the apartment to the child’s elevated blood lead levels and resulting harm. This connection is established through the apartment’s violation and inspection history, prior complaints to the landlord or housing agencies, medical records documenting blood lead levels over time, and expert analysis connecting the exposure to the home’s conditions.

Early investigation is important because apartments are repainted, violations corrected, and physical evidence of the hazard can be removed once a claim is anticipated. Building a complete record requires preserving that evidence before it disappears. Every case at Subin Law is built for trial from the start, and in cases involving permanent harm to children, that preparation begins immediately.

What These Cases Involve

Lead exposure claims go beyond a child’s current symptoms. They require understanding the long-term consequences, including ongoing medical monitoring, specialized educational support, and care that may continue into adulthood. Evaluating that trajectory is central to building a claim that accounts for the full impact of the exposure on the child’s life.

Subin Law takes a limited number of serious cases so each receives focused attention and a strategy built around its specific facts. Consultations are free and confidential. No attorney fees are charged unless compensation is recovered.

Contact Subin Law to discuss your case.

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